Documente Academic
Documente Profesional
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Special Edition for Interested Students of History
This abbreviated edition of FAITH ON TRIAL
is verbatim from the 1993 edition but contains
only the comments of the authors without
sixty-four photocopy exhibits in the original 304 pages.
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Donald K. Short Robert J. Wieland
41 Brookside Drive 2065 Combie Road
Hendersonville, NC 28792 Meadow Vista, CA 95722
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We believe our loyalty to leadership and to the principles of
church organization is repeatedly demonstrated in the history of the
past half century. We have always been respectful to leaders who we
believe are “the anointed of the Lord,” even though we believe they
at times have seriously misunderstood the 1888 message and history,
and have at times unfairly judged our efforts to bring this to their
attention.
The initial issue which prompted our first letter to the officers
of the General Conference at the 1950 General Conference Session
(reproduced at the end of this document) was the reality of Baal
worship in our midst. The idea that we could be confused by a
“false christ” in place of the true One has been resisted by General
Conference leadership; nevertheless there is clear testimony from
Ellen White that as a consequence of “our” corporate rejection “in
a great degree” of the 1888 message, Baal worship would enter in
among us (1SM 234, 235; TM 467, 468).
In Adventists Affirm of Spring 1993 Dr. Mervyn Maxwell tells
of his being “annoyed” and “stunned” as a committee member when
he first heard us present this to General Conference brethren. Before
his death he published the article in which he repented of being
so “annoyed” and frankly recognized the reality of Ellen White’s
prediction of Baal worship infiltrating our ranks. This matter of Baal
worship is the central issue, and has been all this half century. Was Ellen
White right, or was she wrong?
As a reader and loyal church member, you have the duty of
thoughtful study. Jesus said, “Judge righteous judgment.”
Donald K. Short and Robert J. Wieland
July 4, 2001
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Foreword
History At Issue
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Again, this documentation may be especially relevant today
as some “independent ministries” and separationists challenge loyal
church members to withdraw their support and even membership
from the organized church. Because the authors of this essay are
loyal to the organization of the church they have no sympathy with
such a suggestion. But they believe that the documentation of this
issue of 1888 may illuminate some of the original sources of our
present disunity and may strengthen ties of loyalty which are now
being severely strained.
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Chapter One
The Initial Appeal
The year was 1950. The place was the Civic Auditorium in San
Francisco, where the forty-sixth session of the General Conference
convened from July 10 to 22. Among the more than 850 delegates to
“this great world conference” came these two missionaries from the
Southern African Division who were home on their first furlough
after serving for a number of years in the East African Union
Mission.
One was a mission director in Kenya at a station which at
the time professed the largest membership in Africa, while the
other served as mission field president in Uganda. Both were deeply
concerned with the spiritual needs of the church in Africa. Although
they had known each other from college days at Southern Junior and
Washington Missionary College, they had had no special association
over the years, having seen each other but once at a workers’ meeting
in their Union.
As a coincidence they went on furlough together traveling with
their families from Mombasa on the S.S. Llandovery Castle, through
the Red Sea, the Mediterranean, and finally on to England. In due
course they arrived at the Theological Seminary in Washington where
they were to spend the winter and spring months of their furlough
time in study, ending with attendance at the General Conference
session just before returning to Africa.
Their experience at the Seminary in 1949 was unique. While
the missionary from Kenya took courses in church history, the one
from Uganda attended classes in theology where he heard some (to
him) troubling concepts. When he discussed the matter with the
Seminary president, he was told he must forthwith leave—being
perhaps the only ordained minister ever so expelled from the
seminary. This traumatic experience became an occasion for sleepless
nights of earnest prayer, study, and surrender. (He spent the winter
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months of his furlough time in research into the 1888 history and
message, and in writing a book manuscript which seventeen years
later found publication as In Search of the Cross.)
Forbidden at the White Estate to delve into Ellen White’s
unpublished writings on the subject of 1888, he made efforts to
contact surviving retired ministers who had known Ellen White
personally, to ask permission to read what unpublished material
from her pen that they might have. In due course he amassed a
considerable file of then-unknown material on the subject.
A book review in the February 1950 Ministry aroused his interest
for he was convicted that it evidenced serious confusion regarding
the gospel of righteousness by faith. He wrote to the Ministerial
Association leaders and then to the General Conference president
expressing concern that we as Adventists not lose the uniqueness
of the “third angel’s message in verity.” In general, his letters were
not well received, although the president did respond with what
seemed to be genuine appreciation. But several letters from Elder W.
A. Spicer expressed warm support for his concern encouragement
which was crucial in a time of agonizing perplexity.1
When they arrived in San Francisco the first meeting the
two delegates attended was the Ministerial Association in Polk
Hall, west of the main auditorium, July 6 to 10—four days prior to
the regular Session. The platform for this meeting had a royal blue
1
The specific issue was whether E.Stanley Jones correctly understood
true righteousness by faith and could give Adventist ministers help in
proclaiming it. This author maintained that his fundamental concepts
were tinctured with Spiritualism. Spicer agreed, writing: ‘Thank God
you saw the evil in his book. I regard him as doing about the worst
work of any modern religious agent. … If others would protest as you
have done, it might do some good.” During the summer of 1950 he
published a frank article in the Review detailing his concern. Spicer,
an ex-president, at that time was one of our most highly respected
leaders. His encouragement at this early stage in the face of General
Conference discouragement was an intimation of coming decades of
continuing tension and confusion.
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curtain backdrop with a motto in letters of gold, “Aflame for God.”
During these ministerial meetings the theme, “Christ-centered
preaching,” was promoted. The two missionaries from East Africa
were impressed with the vast array of activities, booths, placards and
massive arrangements for the meetings. This was their first General
Conference session to attend. It would not be the last.
Elder J. L. McElhany, president of the General Conference
for fourteen years, withdrew. Because of illness on the way to the
conference, his opening address on Monday evening, July 10, was
read by his secretary, Elder A. W. Cormack.
One-fourth of his sermon was direct quotation from Ellen
White. His own concern was evident as he used a portion from
Life Sketches, pp. 323, 324: “Those who believe the truth must be as
faithful sentinels on the watchtower, or Satan will suggest specious
reasonings to them, and they will give utterance to opinions that will
betray sacred, holy trusts. The enmity of Satan against good, will be
manifested more and more, as he brings his forces into activity in his
last work of rebellion; and every soul that is not fully surrendered
to God, and kept by divine power, will form an alliance with Satan
against heaven, and join in battle against the Ruler of the universe.”
Before using this part of a much longer quotation he stated his
own conviction in these words: “The greatest dangers we face today
are not from without but from changing emphasis and shifting
attitudes from within.” He followed his Ellen White quotation with
the solemn question to the conference: “Is it too much to expect that
all those who stand as leaders in this movement shall, in the way they
teach and in the manner in which they live out the principles of this
message, clearly reveal that they are sanctified by the truth?”
He went on to quote from his address at the 1946 General
Conference: “I lift my voice today in solemn warning against any
attempt from whatsoever source to set aside, to modify, or to com
promise these great principles of truth that have made this movement
what it is.”
As Elder McElhany laid down his responsibilities, the session
voted Elder W. H. Branson to be the next General Conference
president.
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July 11, 1950. It was in this context at the Session that the two
young missionaries from Africa wrote their letter to the members of
the General Conference Committee. They wrote in response to an
urgency voiced in a public announcement that if any delegate had
a burden on his heart, express it. Elder L. K. Dickson had declared
in the Sabbath worship service preceding the session that “we must
make a right turn at this session where we took a wrong turn in
1888.” These two authors sensed that world conditions were in crisis;
the new atomic age might usher in another world war; it’s time to
get serious.
That letter, over four pages long, set in motion a dialogue and
precipitated issues that have remained unresolved for over forty years.
The letter is quoted in full as Exhibit 1. It challenged the General
Conference Committee with sober considerations. Some major
points:
• There is great confusion in our ranks today because much so-
called “Christ-centered preaching” is in reality anti-christ centered
preaching.
• Through the three-fold union of apostate Protestantism,
Romanism, and Spiritualism, Satan will take the religious world
captive and modern evangelists will present a “Christ” that is
identifiable with the God of modern Spiritualism.
• Lip service is paid to our distinctive doctrines but they are
repeatedly disparaged as secondary, this “Christ” being considered
primary; thus a vague mysticism is permeating Adventism calculated
to deceive the very elect.
• The incident of Dr. Kellogg’s apostasy involving “deadly
heresies,”“doctrines of devils,” and “spiritualistic sentiments” confirms
that Seventh-day Adventists can be deceived.
• The spiritualistic sophistries which deceived Dr. Kellogg
and a great proportion of the leaders then were a forerunner of the
almost overmastering attempt of Satan to lead us into Spiritualism
as we near the end.
• The peril of this deception is confirmed by numerous
statements from Ellen White.
• This refined Spiritualism constitutes a species of virtual Baal
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worship that has been gradual and unconscious.
• This departure into Baal worship is the consequence of
not discerning the light of righteousness by faith revealed in 1888
(Testimonies to Ministers, pp. 467, 468).
• Highly refined Spiritualism is a counterfeit species of
righteousness by faith in opposition to the true revival such as Jones
and Waggoner and Sister White brought in 1888.
• This modern Spiritualism is not discerned by our people and
can set up a false god, a false “Christ,” and a false “Holy Spirit.”
• The type of Christian experience being preached among us
today is practically that advocated by popular evangelists and is a
manifest departure from the truths taught in the Bible and Steps to
Christ.
• Our dear people need to have this important matter clarified
and nothing before this gathering can possibly be as weighty with
serious import.
July 18, 1950. After one week with no answer they wrote
another letter on July 18 (Exhibit 2). The “unofficial” sentiment
suggested that they not be allowed to return to Africa until the
matter was “cleared up.” Their second letter pointed out that they had
not challenged a tenet of Adventist doctrine but were only appealing
for a return to the faith endorsed by divine leading in our history:
“We freely confess that it may not be impossible that we are indeed
the most stupid fools ever to attend a General Conference session.
But, if we are, it should be most easily possible for you to show us
wherein, logically and rationally and truthfully, our conclusions are
utterly erroneous. This matter is very serious; either we are terribly
right, or we are terribly wrong.”
Nearly two pages of their four page letter are quoted from
Manuscript 15, 1888, written in November at the time of the 1888
conference and addressed to: “Dear Brethren Assembled at General
Conference.” In this, Ellen White made a plea to exercise “the spirit
of Christians” and not to let “strong feelings of prejudice arise.” She
supports the message that was given at this session by declaring: “Dr.
Waggoner has spoken to us in a straightforward manner. There is
precious light in what he has said.”
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This second letter closes with an appeal: “Let the Cross be
restored to the everlasting gospel. Let Israel behold the Lamb of
God, rather than this false Christ, this Babylonian Baal, held up
before them at the present time.”
July 20, 1950. On the last day of the conference a letter
came to these two missionary delegates (Exhibit 3). The officers
acknowledged the letters of July 11 and 18. With a “sympathetic
spirit” they suggested that “it seems that both of you are passing
through a spiritual conflict in relation to this movement of which
you are a part.” The officers could not fathom the possibility “that, as
Israel of old, we are today worshipping at the altars of Baal instead
of the true God of Israel.” They acknowledged that “we have not
had time, in the busy hours of this session, to give the matter any
consideration. But we believe that before either of you should plan to
return to Africa that we must have an understanding with you.”
Their letter closed with a solemn declaration: “Brethren, you
are on dangerous ground. You are on the path that Satan trod in
your spirit of accusation which led to his being cast out of heaven. …
We cannot see that God has placed you in His church as a critic of
your brethren, but we want to help you and save you to your work in
Africa.” Solemn words, to drive us to our knees!
August 3, 1950. Because the missionary from Uganda had been
expelled from the seminary he was staying in Florida. The other from
Kenya was in the seminary apartments in Washington. This meant
that two separate replies were sent to the General Conference. The
letter from the Florida address is dated August 3, 1950 (Exhibit 4).
This two and one-half page letter is frank. It raises the question, “Can
you point out statements that were either unkind, un-Christian, or
evidencing irrelevant personal thrusts? If, doctrinally and historically,
we should eventually be shown to be right, do not the exigencies of
the present crisis require forthright, frank, honest treatment?” Their
return sailing date to Africa was in limbo—awaiting directions from
the brethren.
August 6, 1950. The reply from the missionary in Washington
was one and one-half pages (Exhibit 5). The reason for their letters
was stated: “We were convinced that to continue to be silent was
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to be dishonest to our convictions. We have not spread this matter
abroad but placed it before the highest body we know so that the
proper consideration could be given to it. The brethren will have
to judge if this is ‘not cooperation’. We stand ready to counsel with
the brethren. We respect our experienced leaders but it should be
remembered that age has never made error into truth. … Awaiting
your directions.”
September 5, 1950. A letter from the same General Conference
associate secretary under date of September 5 set out the immediate
plan (Exhibit 6). The General Conference officers suggested that a
small committee have an interview with the two missionaries. This
was set for September 13, at 3 p.m.
September 13, 1950. After more than forty years it is not
certain who was present except the two missionaries and among
others, one vice-president and one associate secretary of the General
Conference, one associate secretary of the Ministerial Association, and
the secretary of the Ellen G. White Estate. A three-page “Outline of
Procedure” was to guide the interview (Exhibit 7). There was more in
the “Outline” than could be covered in one interview; to try to make
the matter clear the two missionaries requested that they be allowed
to present written evidence of confusion in contemporary concepts.
They were convinced that much precious light had been lost since
Minneapolis—honest deceptions had crept into the church. During
the meeting the secretary of the White Estate affirmed positively
that the presentation of righteousness by faith at the 1888 General
Conference “was accepted.” Those who had initially opposed the
message made their confessions within five years and the opposition
ceased.2
2
By the time of the 1988 Minneapolis Centennial it was “officially”
recognized that the message had not been accepted and that
Ellen White was publicly defied at the 1888 meeting. Elder A. L.
White’s position was to become for decades the dominant General
Conference rebuttal to these authors’ appeal. He based his opinion
on the position expressed by his father. Elder W. C. White, who
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September 14, 1950. The day after the interview a further
paper was presented to the Special Committee (Exhibit 8). This laid
the ground for the manuscript that was to be discussed over the next
several decades.
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this time and the “official action” of the committee was still in the
future, it was “definitely” planned that this booking be accepted, and
so it was. Exhibit 10 is the letter of acceptance for the October 27
booking. There were unknown factors pending, but these would be
cared for in due time.
October 5, 1950. The associate secretary confirmed that the
booking was in order. Also even though the last portion of the
manuscript was not in their hands they considered there was no need
for another interview. This meant that both families could go back to
Africa (Exhibit 11).
“To the Members of the
Special Committee”
October 5, 1950. As the committee was considering
the manuscript, certain other facts needed consideration. An
accompanying statement was submitted on October 5 (Exhibit 12).
This four-page letter delineated serious problems that were evident at
the Session just past, pointing out dangers then which have become
rather operational procedures in our ranks at the present time.
October 17, 1950. The associate secretary of the General
Conference sent a joint letter to the two missionaries now officially
cleared to return to Africa (Exhibit 13). But the manuscript required
more time for study. Consequently: “We feel that because of the
content of the manuscript and the nature of the problems involved
that the manuscript should have wider study than we have thus
far been able to give it. We are, therefore, recommending that your
manuscript be referred to the Defense Literature Committee of
the General Conference for further study and investigation. … In
saying this we do not in any sense agree with your conclusions, but
we believe when any of our brethren have made such a thorough
study on the question as you have, that the matter should not be
passed by lightly.” Of concern was the possibility of “agitation among
the workers,” but assurances had been given to the leaders in Africa
that this would not happen. This letter was received in New York the
day before the S.S. African Planet sailed for Africa. A reply from the
Kenya missionary was written onboard ship enroute to Walvis Bay.
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November 3, 1950. The reply to the question of “agitation”
is given in this letter (Exhibit 14). The two workers would have
discussion with fellow missionaries only in reply to their direct
questions, and in cooperation with the leaders.
Their concern was clear: “Indeed if the General Conference
Committee after careful study considers the premise and conclusion
of the paper to be erroneous, there remains no place in this world
for us to take the matter and no amount of agitation would avail
anything.”
November 29, 1950. This cordial letter from the associate
secretary was the beginning of relations as usual (see Exhibit 15). It
closed with: “There is a great work to be done, and we are living in
solemn times.”
In the meantime both missionaries arrived back in East Africa.
By some unforeseen providence they were assigned to the same
mission station in Uganda. One continued to serve as the president
of the field and the other was to serve as acting treasurer during
the regular treasurer’s furlough. As the weeks and months went by
they felt a growing concern as to what the brethren would finally say
about the manuscript for the General Conference was “the highest
authority on earth.”
Could it be possible that buried in the Ellen G. White vault
were some statements that contradicted or superseded the many
statements these authors had cited in the manuscript about the 1888
rejection? They had written it without access to the Ellen White
vault, in fact access had been denied. They had used many published
statements such as Testimonies to Ministers, etc., but all the citations
from unpublished Ellen White materials had come from various
unofficial sources, retired workers, and duplicate copies of original
typings that she had placed in the hands of trusted workers in her
lifetime. (All of these documents are of course now freely available
in The Ellen G. White 1888 Materials. Our using these unpublished
materials had even evoked from the White Estate a threat of possi
ble legal action against us.)
The two missionaries went about their work in Africa sensing
that a sword was dangling over their heads.
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Chapter Two
Sunshine and Storms
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took hold of our people to a marked degree. … I am convinced that
the message of justification by faith took hold of our people at that
time, and served to rescue them from the doldrums which had set
in the 1880’s, and prepared them to receive and participate in the
mighty forward movement throughout the world which began with
the great Conference of 1901.”
• The reply cites numerous publications in subsequent years
by E. J. Waggoner and A. T. Jones as proof that the message was
proclaimed; but more important, what they expounded is now
available “in more effective form, in the writings of the Spirit of
prophecy and in other of our publications.” (This last point is a long-
standing issue that is as yet unresolved).
• The reply notes that the manuscript affirms that “there is
before the remnant church a heavy account to settle. The sooner the
issue is faced squarely and candidly the better (p. 2). … A recognition
of the significance of our denominational history in the light of
Spirit of Prophecy declarations, is essential before the loud cry can be
recognized, and received. Could any other kind of ‘loud cry’ than that
which would follow a denominational repentance Tighten the earth
with glory’? What glory for God would there be in it?” (p. 137). But
this concept of corporate and denominational repentance is rejected
emphatically: “We do not believe that it is according to God’s plan
and purpose for the present leadership of the movement to make
acknowledgement or confession, either private or public, concerning
any of the mistakes made by the leadership of a by-gone generation.
… Your proposal is not according to God’s plan in His dealings with
His people.”
• The manuscript noted Ellen White’s prediction of Baal
worship as a result of rejecting the 1888 message (Testimonies to
Ministers, pp. 467, 468), and asserted that we face that danger of
confusion with a false christ and Baal worship in our books and
presentations. This is also stoutly denied: “Such a charge that the
ministry is in any sense of the word, following the pattern of Baal
worship, is entirely false and unfounded. It is our conviction that this
charge is not only without foundation, but that in making it, you have
done a gross injustice to many of our trusted, honored, and Spirit-
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filled workers. Such charges remind us of those who, in the days of
the Saviour, charged Him with casting out devils by Beelzebub, the
prince of devils. Our earnest counsel to you is not to stand as critics
of your brethren.”
• The report urged that our need was not to consider “the
mistakes of a previous generation” but rather, “Can we not recognize
in the call made at the recent General Conference the call of God
to His people today? This appeal went around the earth, and from
both leaders and people there has been a remarkable response from
all over the world. … Out of this has grown a strong and determined
resolve under God to finish quickly the work He has committed to
His people.”
[The call that went out from this session was two-fold: (1)
claim the reception of the latter rain of the Holy Spirit by simply
assuming that we have it irrespective of a lack of repentance or
preparation, and (2) double our church membership: “[If ] we will
reach out today, and every day, and lay hold of this promised blessing
and receive the Holy Spirit according to God’s promise, we ought to
go back from this meeting with a cry to our churches to double our
membership between now and the next session. … If we can only
enter into that experience where we have tongues of fire as we preach
to men, thousands will come in a day” (Review and Herald, July 17,
1950, p. 117)].
• The Defense Literature Committee report closed their
reply with a finality that perplexed the authors and seemed to
defy history and all that Ellen White had said about 1888. Their
assessment: “We see nothing new in your manuscript. … Two years
after the General Conference in 1888 God was working on the
hearts of men, and … many of the leaders and of the people happily
responded to the appeals that were made. … If you accept this counsel
… you will not wish to press your rather critical views nor to circulate
them any further.”
February 27, 1952. This Defense Literature Committee report
unequivocally decided that “1888 Re-examined” was error and that
at least part of the paper was “false and unfounded.” What shall we
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do? More study, more prayer, more seeking the Lord for guidance as
to duty, more surrender.
The authors wrote a four-page response (Exhibit 18): “We
acknowledge the General Conference to be the highest body
God has placed on earth and therefore the matter is now their
responsibility—being the properly constituted watchmen upon the
walls of Zion. … While we make this statement of submission to
the General Conference we also wish to be frank in saying that we
do not believe the reply as given to us will bear analysis. Therefore
to go into your file before it is closed on this matter we submit the
following and quite needless to say time will soon prove how ‘false
and unfounded’ or how dreadfully true our convictions are.”
Nine specific points are covered in the letter. Number 2, one
of the more lengthy, points out that “it is not wrong to believe that
the last generation of mankind will have a ‘more mature concept
of the everlasting gospel than has been perceived by any previous
generation of human beings’,” just as surely as Paul preached a more
mature understanding of the gospel than Abraham. “Certainly Paul
or Luther or Wesley did not preach the ‘third angel’s message in
verity’.”
Point number 6, with over one page of considerations, deals
with the biblical record supporting the need to recognize and profit
from mistakes of past generations. This has come to be known as
“corporate repentance.” 3 Twelve different texts are cited as proof that
this is true. The biblical accounts indicate that true repentance and
confession brought blessing to Israel.
As far as the authors could know at the time, this was the end
of the dialogue: “In closing we would say … surely God will soon
3
Although opposed at the time and frequently since, the idea of
corporate repentance has been presented in a positive light in The
Power of the Spirit (Review and Herald, 1991), co-authored by
a former General Conference president and an Ellen G. White
Estate Associate Secretary, and in a powerful article by the editor
in the February 1993 Ministry entitled “Laodicea and Corporate
Repentance.”
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give judgment in His own way according to His will and we shall be
proven terribly wrong or dreadfully right. We leave the case in His
hands.”
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impossible. Lay members who saw it viewed official attempts
to suppress it as an exercise of “kingly power” and a denial of
the principles of Christian liberty. Official condemnation of the
manuscript unsupported by convincing evidence precipitated among
them an unprecedented loss of confidence in the leadership of the
church. The more readers were convinced that the basic thesis of the
manuscript was supported by Ellen White and historical evidence,
the more astounded they were by persistent General Conference
rejection of it. This breakdown of leadership credibility became
especially evident in the Australasian Division.4
In 1956 a Seventh-day Adventist couple in the American West,
without any permission, duplicated 90 copies of the manuscript. For
many, this obviously increased the awareness of Adventist history. The
authors wrote to individuals asking them to please leave the manu
script alone and not circulate it; it was written for the attention of the
General Conference whose task it is to lead out in denominational
repentance. But by 1957 church members were sending inquiries
to the General Conference. What was wrong with the manuscript?
Why had they rejected it?
The authors had to give assurance to the brethren that the
agitation was not of their making. They expressed the firm conviction
that a denominational repentance and humbling of heart before the
Lord should be initiated by the world leadership of the church and
not be neglected by them so that only the laity could take the lead.
They maintained that the breakdown of confidence in leadership was
not the result of telling the truth about our history, but of leadership
suppressing that truth.
If there was any truth in the manuscript, it would “be recognized
in due time. Conversely, if there was indeed nothing in it of real value
as the reply of the Defense Literature Committee in 1951 pointed
out, it would be expected to die a natural death, as anything without
the Lord’s blessing usually does.”
4
Documentation of this tragic development has been assembled
in a separate file entitled, “Does ‘1888 Re-examined’ Lead to a
Rebellious Offshoot Movement?”
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Before the year 1957 was over, readers were pressuring the
General Conference to make a reasonable and credible reply to
the manuscript. A letter from one of the General Field Secretaries,
September 24, makes this plain.
September 24 and September 9, 1957. The authors received
a three-page letter from a Seventh-day Adventist local church
elder in the West, A. L. Hudson (Exhibits 19 and 20). This church
elder was concerned that the General Conference refused to reply
to his questions. His opinion was that the manuscript had started
something that was now out of theirs as well as the authors’ control.
This church elder considered the official opposition taken by
the General Conference to be against “the purposes of God.” He
proposed to bring the matter before the church at large in an official
way, which he tried to do subsequently, February 3, 1959.
In the meantime other considerations were coming into
focus.
Forty-eighth Session
General Conference of
Seventh-day Adventists
Cleveland Public Auditorium,
Cleveland, Ohio
June 19 - 28, 1958
Eight years had gone by and now the same two missionaries
from Africa were once more delegates to a Session. They had heard
rumors in Africa that a second General Conference condemnation
of their manuscript was in preparation. Very early in the Session
one of the general vice-presidents showed them a draft copy of an
official report that was to be released subsequently. As it turned out,
this document of 49 pages would later be published in September. It
was produced under the authority of “a committee appointed by the
officers” and was entitled, “Further Appraisal of the Manuscript ‘1888
Re-examined’.”
When the authors read the draft at the Session they informed
the vice-president that in its present form the document would
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bring embarrassment to the General Conference. This conver
sation was followed by a letter dated June 23, 1958 in which the
authors detailed the points that were so obviously false that they
would humiliate leadership if made public (Exhibit 21). However as
the officers had planned, at the end of the summer “Appraisal” was
published with none of the corrections which the authors suggested
were necessary in order to avoid the tragedy of General Conference
embarrassment.
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produced a manuscript that is detrimental to the church, derogatory
to the leaders of the church, and to uninformed individuals who may
happen to read it.”
There is no way to know just how far the influence of the
manuscript had gone in the English-speaking church. People copied
and distributed portions at random. Someone in Australia reproduced
sections which turned up in East Africa as attributed to “an
unknown teacher.” The November 1958 issue of the denomination’s
missionary journal THESE TIMES carried an article about Baal
worship under the regular monthly heading, “Pageant of Prophecy”
which included on page 33 a lengthy verbatim quote from 1888 Re-
examined from the chapter, “The True Christ vs. the False Christ,”
without attributing the source. Some editor considered the material
to be truth sufficiently clear to be worthy of publication in one of the
church’s leading missionary journals.
“An Answer to
‘Further Appraisal of the Manuscript
“1888 Re-examined’”
October, 1958
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not the actual subject matter be given attention? Is it the Lord’s will
that they accept condemnation without consideration?
They decided to explore sixteen specific charges in a 70-page
response. They respectfully submitted that there is no question but
that they had used Ellen G. White statements honestly, reasonably,
and in harmony with her expressed intent. “The more research is
continued, the more completely is this vindication evident in state
ments hitherto unknown.”
When the authors’ “An Answer” became available in October
1958 to anyone interested, the General Conference suddenly
withdrew “A Further Appraisal” from circulation, and it has never
been available since.
A church member who had been in correspondence with the
General Conference over a period of time wrote to the officers and
pointed out their untenable position. He addressed his letter to the
Secretary but also sent copies to two other General Conference
personnel and to the manuscript authors. The authors set forth their
convictions to this member, with copies to the same brethren. In this
letter of October 24, 1958, the following paragraph had to set out
their stand:
“We are therefore faced today with making our position clear.
It is this. For eight years we have made every endeavor to respect
the positions of our brethren in the General Conference. When
we requested individuals not to reproduce the manuscript, it was
because of this respect and deference. We have never desired to
enter into controversy with the General Conference or to appeal the
discussion to the church at large. We do not relish even the thought
of controversy. But God forbid, that out of respect or deference to
certain leaders or their leadership, we should deny truth. Actually
we do not believe a very large segment of the General Conference
is even acquainted with the manuscript ‘1888 Re-examined,’
hence ‘Appraisal’ represents the reply of a very small group of men.
Nonetheless it is issued under the name of the General Conference
and must be accepted as such. For this we are very sorry, but thus
history is being made. As the record will show, our brethren have had
repeated requests over the past eight years to face up to the issue, all
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of which has been to no avail. We can therefore no longer endeavor
to shield our brethren in this matter, come what may.”
This paragraph the brethren received with grave concern. They
considered it to be a “declaration of war.” Consequently they called
for another meeting for November 17, 1958. The next day after the
meeting the authors sent a letter of summary to the committee, lest
they leave any misunderstanding.
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field in Central Kenya, and returned the other worker to continue as
manager of the East African Publishing House. “1888” was in the
Lord’s hands now, and the authors could devote their full attention
to African matters.
But peace was not to come so easily. Upon their arrival in East
Africa they found a letter from the General Conference president
(Exhibit 26). This was perhaps the first specifically expressed concern
from the highest officer of the church. He saw a problem in the free
circulation of the manuscript in whole or in part “to create issues.”
The president requested a letter to “give definite instructions that
you do not authorize any one to circulate the manuscript or quote
from it, and that you have left the matter in the hands of the General
Conference brethren.”
How could the authors respond honestly? Conscientious,
loyal church members were concerned, for they saw the obvious
import of seventy years of history since 1888. Further, they saw what
the inspired agent of the gift of prophecy had said in her available
writings about the 1888 history. Lay members who loved the church,
and were loyal to it through and through, recognized truth. But they
were sadly convinced there were agencies in the General Conference
that suppressed and denied it.
In the months of correspondence that were to follow, the
president, in writing to us, made frequent reference to Ellen White’s
counsel regarding brethren of experience” in Testimonies, Vol. 5, p.
293: “The only safety for any of us is in receiving no new doctrine,
no new interpretation of the Scriptures, without first submitting it
to brethren of experience. Lay it before them in a humble, teachable
spirit, with earnest prayer; and if they see no light in it, yield to their
judgment…” Many times the authors re-read and pondered the
entire testimony to “Brother D” (pp. 289-297).
The crucial question was, Who are the “brethren of experience”?
Are they exclusively General Conference personnel, as the president
insisted? Or could they include other experienced, thoughtful,
consecrated ministers and laity?
Elder W. A. Spicer had encouraged the authors in the
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beginning, and since then scores, yes hundreds, of “experienced”
people in all walks of Adventist life had endorsed the basic thesis of
the manuscript, some of them professors in Potomac University (the
seminary). Where was the truth?
Again, the date of Ellen White’s testimony to “Brother D”
was 1884. If Ellen White had applied that particular counsel to
silence Jones and Waggoner four years later, they would have been
crushed, for “in a great degree” the General Conference “brethren of
experience” had condemned their message.
Someone had written,
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Chapter Three
The Five Anonymous Judges
June 14, 1959. The authors wrestled with a serious task to make
their stand clear as they replied to the General Conference president.
They must be submissive to “the highest authority on earth,” yet they
must also be honest (Exhibit 27). They stated: “The passage of time
has deepened our conviction that the thesis of this manuscript is
correct and true. In particular this was confirmed after our further
research following our reading of ‘Appraisal’. … We consider that
our reiterated purpose to submit to the authority of the General
Conference should not be interpreted as a retraction of our position,
nor a modification of our convictions regarding the manuscript.”
Three numbered paragraphs summarized their reply: “We
definitely do not approve of the publication of the manuscript
against your official opposition to it”; “(2) The General Confer
ence Committee themselves have thus far not fully grasped the
significance and import of the manuscript. … We dare not act as
conscience for workers or lay members in good and regular stand
ing …who feel a burden to appeal to the General Conference for a
more careful consideration of the matter”; (3) “The phrase we used,
‘disposition of Providence,’ requires that we not only take our hands
off the manuscript to avoid any agitation or promotion of it, but also
refrain from repressing other loyal Seventh-day Adventists who may
be motivated by Providence entirely independently of ourselves, to
appeal the matter to you.”
June 29, 1959. The General Conference president considered
“the disposition of Providence” to be exclusively, “solely,” General
Conference control. There seemed no possibility that the Lord
might work in any other way. He wrote further (Exhibit 28): “I
had hoped, dear brethren, for a clear-cut statement from you to the
effect that you had left the matter of your manuscript in the hands
of the General Conference brethren, and that you were trusting in
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the Lord to work things out as He deems best. … I had expected
that you would manifest faith in the Lord’s guidance and confidence
in your brethren by placing the matter in the hands of the General
Conference brethren solely to be guided by their counsel.” He
considered that the manuscript had been given sufficient careful
consideration because a selected group at great expense and effort
had done this. He saw the General Conference functioning as God’s
voice and authority on earth.
September 25, 1959. Several weeks passed before the authors
sent a reply to the president. They were not certain if a reply was
expected; however, they wrote one in a most serious vein (Exhibit
29). The two-page letter respectfully pointed out that although he
had stated that the manuscript has been given careful consideration,
a near decade of attention to it had thus far failed completely to
consider the actual subject matter. Eight points were listed which
with one exception had been ignored; the exception being that it was
denied that the message had been rejected, but no support was given
for that bald statement. This letter, to the chief officer of the church,
was one of the most serious they wrote over a period of years.
December 18, 1959. Increasing agitation in Australia over
the manuscript gave cause for another letter to the president, with a
statement which might be used to make clear the authors’ loyalty to
the church (Exhibit 30).
January 13, 1960. The president considered that their statement
did not go far enough (Exhibit 31). He wanted the manuscript to
come totally under the control of the General Conference, and that
the authors “definitely refuse permission to anyone else to use it
unless it is released by the brethren [General Conference] in whose
hands it has been placed. … The only logical thing therefore, as I see
it, for you to do is to forbid its use by anyone outside of the General
Conference.”
By this time the manuscript had gone around the world.
It would live or die by virtue of its content, and live only if some
ministers and church members could be willing to study the issues
irrespective of General Conference control.
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January 31, 1960. As tension mounted in the field, the authors
reviewed the record of the past decade, and so sent another letter
to the president (Exhibit 32). This two-page plea and statement
of conviction said in part: “If reasonable sound evidence means
anything, surely the past ten years ought to speak clearly. We believe
this has been eloquently stated by you,—‘If God wants this material
circulated, you may be sure that no one on earth can impede its
circulation.’ To this we would say a solemn, ‘Amen,’ and it should be
added—not even the General Conference can impede its circulation
if it is God’s will otherwise.” The letter closed with an appeal: “Is it
not time to make … acknowledgement and in humility come before
the Lord with sincere repentance and confession of our failings
present and past and forthwith to present the matter to God’s people
as a whole?”
December 15, 1960. Rejection of the authors’ appeal by the
General Conference brought perplexity to lay members who believed
it was valid. Problems with different individuals were on the increase
because of their conviction that the manuscript was basically true.
Near the end of 1960, the General Conference president visited
Africa. The two missionaries wrote a letter to him while he was in
East Africa (Exhibit 33). Their previous document, “An Answer” of
October 1958, had not been acknowledged by the General Conference.
Thus there was a vacuum. In a two-page letter of December 15 they
put forth some very serious questions: “Just where do we stand now
with the General Conference? Must we continue another decade or
so under what is virtually the ban or shadow of their condemnation?
We have been informed, we think quite reliably, that no less than
three attempts were made at headquarters to remove us from the
mission field because of the manuscript.”
(In the meantime the missionary at the East African Publishing
House had been transferred to the division publishing house in Cape
Town).
January 26, 1961. While in East Africa the General Conference
president had had a brief dialogue with the author working in
Kenya, and when he returned to Takoma Park he wrote about this,
mentioning further problems with an individual in California making
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“unauthorized use” of the manuscript. This called for a letter to the
party concerned, with a copy sent to headquarters with a covering
letter by the authors (Exhibit 34). They said: “There are numerous
‘brethren of experience’ who have recognized the historical validity
of our manuscript, among them scholars in universities and senior
colleges. … We do not want to run the risk of that ‘rebuke of the
Lord’ that will rest upon those who dare to condemn truth.”
February 10, 1961. The president considered it sufficient that
“two answers were given,” being the result of “very careful thought”
(Exhibit 35) He then put the question: “Would you care to suggest
just what kind of answer you feel is still forthcoming?”
March 20, 1961. The authors acknowledged this letter
(Exhibit 36): “For the record it should be clearly understood
that the manuscript we presented to the brethren has not to date
been considered for content insofar as any reply we have received
indicates.”
April 12, 1961. The president repeated that he thought those
who studied the manuscript had done so carefully (Exhibit 37). They
“felt that the reference to inappropriateness of certain quotations,
as well as certain historical facts referred to, had a definite bearing
on the content and that the content would naturally be affected by
the accuracy or inaccuracy of statements, as well as certain historical
facts surrounding the whole 1888 experience and following it.” In
other words, “brethren of experience” say that the 1888 message was
accepted by leadership; the manuscript says it was not; it follows
therefore that the manuscript cannot be true. He suggested: “Write
out briefly the various points that you think should be considered
and that contain the heart of the manuscript.”
May 17, 1961. Again the president wrote with great concern
about the manuscript getting around in North America (Exhibit
38). He wanted instructions sent that the manuscript was not to
be circulated. His verdict warned of “drastic action”: “I am afraid,
dear brethren, that unless this word is forthcoming from you without
delay, some rather drastic action will have to be taken.” The authors
knew what such “drastic action” might mean.
May 25, 1961. Their reply noted with concern the president’s
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letter of May 17th. To try to assist and to cooperate as far as possible
without violating conscience, they sent a further statement which
the brethren might use (Exhibit 39).
June 8, 1961. The president continued to be disappointed
and perplexed (Exhibit 40). He considered that since the authors
wrote the manuscript, they must automatically be responsible for
the independent way it was being distributed. They must therefore
bear the blame for a breakdown of confidence in leadership. In fact,
the General Conference would not give attention to a proposed
summary of the manuscript until the authors made a further,
stronger statement affirming total control of the document by the
General Conference: “Before the brethren will want to give serious
consideration to the points that I requested you to state, I think such
a statement should be forthcoming. It need not be long but it should
be pointed, without any diluting, additional statements.”
June 21, 1961. The authors prepared a statement: ‘To Whom
It May Concern,” and sent it with a covering letter (Exhibit 41).
They made a serious comment: “May we also mention again, and
we say this with respect, that it may not be what is written in the
manuscript which breaks down confidence in the church or its
organization, which you mention; but what can easily have that very
effect is for the General Conference to maintain unsubstantiated
condemnation of what loyal and thoughtful Seventh-day Adventists
find it impossible to consider as anything but simple, obvious truth.
Such a situation can be extremely serious.” Was this statement
libelous? Leadership have considered even the suggestion of their
responsibility to be anathema.
July 27, 1961. The original manuscript, 1888 Re-examined
totaled 204 pages but the “Summary” was reduced to 20 pages double-
spaced. This the authors sent under separate cover to the General
Conference with a letter (Exhibit 42). The authors requested that
if possible this resume be placed in the hands of a larger group of
“brethren of experience” to include scholars who will view the matter
objectively and consider the thesis on its merits as historical research,
and that the number include at least a few laymen. To make this
record complete this “Summary” of 20 pages is included as Exhibit
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43.
August 2, 1961. The president’s letter of over two pages implied
that the authors’ suggestion was disrespectful, that administrators’
scholarly abilities were indeed adequate, and that the authors should
“leave the matter in the hands of [them as] ‘brethren of experience,’
believing that God will watch over what is right and true and
that man cannot keep God’s truth permanently from His people”
(Exhibit 44). Viewing the church as a hierarchy, he stated that their
request for laymembers’ participation must be denied: “The wisdom
of the suggestion that laymen be added to an evaluating group we
seriously question. This is a matter that clearly should be dealt with
by ‘brethren of experience.’ We are therefore not bringing this to any
lay member.”
August 10, 1961. The authors stated they do not say that our
leaders are not “honest, sincere, conscientious, and unprejudiced,”
but that committee members unconsciously tend to uphold previous
committee decisions and thus inadvertently approach a problem in
a somewhat biased way (Exhibit 45). Unaware that more than three
decades of discussion must yet go by, they added: “We fully accept
your counsel to believe that the Lord’s overruling Providence will
cause truth to emerge and triumph in His own good time.”
October 18, 1961. Because of continued use of the manuscript
by unauthorized groups, the authors continued to send letters to try
to solve the problem and to defend the General Conference from
embarrassment. Kept informed, the brethren appreciated this as
seen in Exhibit 46. The president also advised us that the “Summary”
of the manuscript had been placed in the hands of five anonymous
individuals for consideration.
October 22, 1961. Lay members continued to be convinced
by the manuscript. So widespread was the knowledge of General
Conference rejection that somewhere a rumor originated that the
authors had been disfellowshipped, but this was, thankfully, not true
(Exhibit 47).
November 6, 1961. Now, after three months, the president
sent a five-page letter. It did not contain the long-awaited report of
the five anonymous judges, but consisted only of excerpts from their
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comments with no answers to the specific questions listed in the
“Summary” (Exhibit 48). He highly recommended the five reviewers
as capable for this work, and affirmed their soundness in the faith.
Yet for some mysterious reason, their names have never yet been
made known to the two authors of the manuscript. Thus they now
found themselves in a no-man’s land of unidentifiable cross-fire.
Judges should be known to the ones judged!
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upon the rejection of it as these two brethren do is not valid.”
• “What difference if the 1888 message was rejected? … It
seems unreasonable to call the present-day church to repentance
on the writings of two men [ Jones and Waggoner] who apostatized
from this message. Surely the Lord has another way of arousing His
people.”
• “To the best of my knowledge, no attempt was made in
1888 to have the church, corporately, go on record as accepting the
message as presented at that time. The appeal was made to people
as individuals, not to the church as a body. … There was no ‘official’
acceptance of the doctrine, to be sure, but neither was there an
‘official’ rejection.”
• “The fact that Brethren Waggoner and Jones later
apostatized implies an inherent instability of character which was
doubtless present years before they stepped out of the church, and I
would not for a moment consider it wise to place what they wrote
during those years before our people generally.”
• “Is it true that the Holy Spirit was spurned and insulted by
our ministers at and after the Minneapolis meeting? Is it true that
Jesus was spurned and insulted in the person of His messengers?
Is it true that in the dark decade following 1888 there prevailed a
serious disregard of the Spirit of prophecy counsel on the part of the
responsible leadership of the church?”
At this point the authors’ hearts were saddened. It was not they
as unworthy missionaries from Africa who declared that the Holy
Spirit was insulted, and Jesus Christ spurned. They were only calling
5
One’s mind went to the story of Jehoikim, the highest officer
of the kingdom of Judah, cutting up Jeremiah’s scroll and casting
it into the fire. Jeremiah 36:20-25. This one reviewer’s rhetorical
but contemptuous questions were destined to be answered in the
solid affirmative by one of a later generation of General Conference
scholars—it is true, the Holy Spirit was insulted and Christ was
re-crucified (Arnold Wallenkampf, What Every Adventist Should
Know About 1888, R&H, 1988, p. 43).
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attention to what the inspired messenger of the Lord had said.5
• The president concluded with the hope that this was now
the end of the matter: “As I look over what these five brethren
have written, I am forced to the conclusion, dear brethren, that our
position in regard to your manuscript must be about that which
our former evaluation committees reached. … May we hope now,
brethren, that this matter may be considered settled?”
November 13, 1961. With a prayer for light and understanding
the authors requested to see the full reports of all five of the
anonymous brethren (Exhibit 49). They could not stifle their deep
conviction that the “beginning” of the loud cry of Revelation 18 and
the initial outpouring of the latter rain were indeed of tremendous
importance.
December 21, 1961. As no reply was received after more than
one month, the authors wrote again requesting the reports in full so
that they might have the benefit of the full counsel (Exhibit 50).
February 6, 1962. After nearly three months the president
replied: “I am not sure that much would be gained by sending the
entire report of these men. One or two have said some confidential
things that perhaps just as well not be publicized” (Exhibit 51). But
another condemnation was in the offing. The letter goes on to say
that a new book was in preparation, “By Faith Alone,” and “I feel it
is quite an answer to the question[s] that you raise in regard to the
1888 meeting.”
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sets the record straight.”
Even to this day church libraries in North America have many
copies on their shelves, testifying to an intense effort of the General
Conference administration to counteract the manuscript in the
1960’s and put an end to further “unauthorized” study and agitation
of 1888.
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authors wrote another letter to the president, appealing once more
for consideration of the actual issues (Exhibit 54). This four-page plea
went back over the years and pointed out how the original Defense
Literature Committee report of 1951 did not deal with specifics but
insisted that the personal opinion of Elder A. W. Spalding be accepted
rather than Ellen White’s clear testimony. No specific consideration
was given to historical subject matter other than to ignore it. * The
second report, “Further Appraisal” in 1958, obviously did not deal
with manuscript content but rather attempted to prove that the
authors were dishonest and used Ellen White material unethically.
* The report of November 6, 1961, supposedly in response to the
“Summary” which listed numerous specific questions, did not supply
a straightforward answer to even one of them. Nevertheless, we trust
that “the Lord will lead, and in submission to you brethren under
Him, we leave all in His hands” (emphasis added).
April 2, 1962. This four-page plea was to be the last—the
next letter was a brief conclusion from the secretary of the president
(Exhibit 55). He stated: “From my understanding of the attitude of
the General Conference Officers they feel that no good purpose will
be served in continuing correspondence over your manuscript. …The
Lord in His own good time and way will indicate if any further steps
should be taken in this matter.” We had reached the end. According
to this, the manuscript is now to lie forever buried.
June 29, 1962. The authors wrote again. They were sorry
that the General Conference wanted to terminate correspondence
(Exhibit 56). “We have confidence in the ultimate vindication of
right.” With this letter correspondence became dormant to a large
degree for several years. Meanwhile, the authors continued with
their assigned duties as missionaries in Africa. But the burden of
these unresolved issues weighed upon them.
The author who worked in Nairobi remembers one day of
fasting and prayer when he earnestly surrendered his soul to the
Lord. In the dingy mission office in Simla House on Victoria Street
he instructed the Africans to answer the phone that day and take
care of the work; he must lock himself in his office to pray and study.
Earnestly he begged the Lord for a piece of “bread,” for the gift of
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an objective understanding of the problem, the insight to re-read the
manuscript with a mind open to the conviction of the Holy Spirit,
for help to “see” it as the General Conference brethren see it, for
the gift of their “mind” rather than his own, for the ability to see
what was wrong with it. With the open Bible at hand and Spirit of
Prophecy books as well, he carefully re-read the manuscript word for
word. By the time the Kenya sun went down that evening, his mind
was at rest. His conscience forced him to confess that the manuscript
tells the truth. The heavenly Father is not cruel; He does not give a
stone when we beg Him for bread.
About this time a General Conference officer visited the
mission fields in East Africa. The authors requested him to take
back a verbal message to the president, paraphrasing Job’s appeal (ch.
13:15), “Though the General Conference slay us, yet will we trust
in them.” The reference to Job expressed their mingled confidence
and perplexity, confidence that at some time before the return of
Jesus there will be a denominational repentance, but perplexity that
successive church administrations see no light in it.
Job could not understand why God was apparently condemning
him. He longed for some ombudsman to mediate between him and
the Almighty, confident that if ever he could have a valid court trial,
God would vindicate the right. Job appealed from the “God” who was
apparently condemning him to the God who he knew would at last
vindicate justice. We were appealing from the General Conference
of the present to some General Conference of the future, confident
that eventually leadership would take a firm stand on the right side.
When By Faith Alone was published (Pacific Press, 1962), it
did not address or settle the real issues. It stated the conviction of
General Conference leadership that there is nothing unique in the
1888 message: “Where was the doctrine of righteousness by faith
to be found in 1888 and the preceding years? In the creeds of the
Protestant churches of the day …” (p. 138). In contrast, the authors
of “1888 Re-examined” insisted that the 1888 message went far
beyond those “creeds,” inasmuch as Ellen White declared it to be the
“beginning” of the loud cry of the third angel’s message, a message
certainly not proclaimed by “the Protestant churches of the day.” It
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is a message of righteousness by faith parallel to and consistent with
the unique Seventh-day Adventist concept of the cleansing of the
heavenly sanctuary. This By Faith Alone fails to recognize. Thus the
essential issue is joined, and remains unresolved to this day.6
1966. However, for some strange reason, general interest in 1888
did not die after the publication of By Faith Alone. As correspondence
between the manuscript authors and church administration faded
away to a large extent, a General Conference vice-president and
member of the Ellen White Estate Board, Elder A. V. Olson, was
preparing another book to condemn the manuscript. Through Crisis
to Victory, 1888—1901 was virtually completed when on April 5,
1963 a heart attack suddenly terminated his life.
The White Estate Board took steps to carry out the intent
of the author to publish the book in March, 1966. The final editing
was done by the Secretary of the White Estate. He also wrote the
“Foreword,” making it clear that the book was called forth by the fact
that some Adventists had reached “misleading conclusions” about the
1888 General Conference Session which needed to be corrected.
The book maintains that the period from 1888 to 1901 “was a
period over which Providence could spell out the word victory.” There
was initial opposition to the 1888 message, but it was largely reversed
by the “confessions” that came in during the few years following 1888.
Since 1901 there has been no serious leadership resistance to the
Holy Spirit’s leading, and therefore 1901 was “victory.”
The book concludes with a ringing affirmation of leadership
faithfulness to Christ; it’s not the hierarchy that is in need; the
6
In 1989 the North American Division officers published “An
Appeal for Unity” in which it is declared that preaching “the
doctrine of righteousness by faith in an end-time setting” will
become a cause for disfellowshipping from the church. Speaking of
“certain independent teachers” in the past, “the leadership was forced
to separate them from the body. … Such action would be taken
reluctantly, and only as a last resort—for the sake of the unity and
the success of the mission of the church” (pp. 5, 9).
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Laodicean message applies to the laity; the delay in finishing the
gospel commission is specifically the fault of uncooperative lay
members (pp. 237-239; the basic thesis of “victory” in 1901 has now
in recent years been thoroughly invalidated by General Conference
scholars. In fact, the opening sermon of the 1990 General Conference
Session in Indianapolis declared that it didn’t happen in “1901”).
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luminous historical facts—and rehearsing these truths in connected
narrative form in Movement of Destiny as we stand on the verge of
the great breakthrough.”
Finally, the church is to be told the full story about 1888.
Meanwhile, the author of Destiny had been corresponding
with the authors of “1888 Reexamined” in a serious attempt to
persuade them to “cease, retreat, and retract” their convictions. He
assured them that the entire leadership of the Seventh-day Adventist
church condemned their appeal for denominational repentance, and
that if Ellen White were alive she would blast them with her most
devastating rebukes. For all their decades of prayer for the heavenly
Father to help them see the truth, they remained incapable of seeing
it. They must retract immediately, or his forthcoming book would
expose them publicly to severe humiliation.
Never had they received such strictures. They responded with
reiterated appeals to be allowed to see the Ellen White evidence that
he said required their retraction. He refused to grant the privilege,
insisting that they must take his word for it, and that his demand
was made with the full endorsement of the General Conference
brethren, the theological seminary, and the Ellen G. White Estate
leadership. He had the material that required their retraction, but
they were not to see it until the book is published. The authors replied
that they could not retract their deep convictions based on Ellen
White evidence that they had seen with their own eyes for reports of
supposedly contradictory Ellen White evidence others said they had
seen, but which they themselves were not permitted to see.
All they could do was to wait with bated breath for their
imminent public pilloring (the relevant file of L. E. Froom
correspondence is included in Appendix A).
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Chapter Four
“An Explicit Confession …
Due the Church”
7
The historical thesis of this book has in recent years been seriously
invalidated by current official scholars. See Arnold Wallenkampf,
What Every Adventist Should Know About 1888 (Review and Herald,
1987); George Knight, From 1888 to Apostasy (Review and Herald,
1987), and Angry Saints (Review and Herald, 1989).
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1888 tensions there have been recurrent harpers on the note that
the Church, and primarily its leaders, actually rejected the Message
of 1888—at and following that fateful hour of trial. … [E]choers
still persist, maintaining that the leadership of the Movement at
that time, ‘rejected’ the message of Righteousness by Faith.” “[I]f the
charge be not true, an explicit confession is due the Church today
by promulgators of a misleading charge.” In view of our extended
correspondence, these authors knew immediately who the writer had
in mind.
8
When a book review of Movement of Destiny appeared in the
Andrews University Seminary Series of January 1972, Wieland and
Short were openly named as the ones referred to by Froom. This
same book review observed that numerous problems “diminish the
work as dependable history.”
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November 1972. When one of the authors read the newly
published book, he communicated to the General Conference
officers specific information detailing reasons why the publication
of this book would entail embarrassment for the leadership of this
church. Thoughtful readers would find their confidence in leadership
integrity shaken. Why precipitate a breakdown of confidence? Why
provide ammunition to critics?
No response came. The answer was obvious: there was supreme
confidence that Movement of Destiny had at last put the 1888 issues
to rest. Nothing must be allowed to stand in the way of this book.
The authors waited for a year before responding to its public
demand, certain that the officers who had endorsed the book would
come to realize what a liability it was and withdraw it from circulation.
Finally they decided it was duty to respond to such a public demand
for a “confession.”
The booklet of 65 pages was entitled An Explicit Confession …
Due the Church. The authors go back to 1950 and rehearse a series of
facts, detailing how abundant Spirit of prophecy testimony declares
that the opposition to the 1888 message was enmity against Christ of
the same nature as the enmity the Jewish leaders manifested against
Him at the crucifixion. The cleansing of the heavenly sanctuary can
never be complete until both Calvary and the 1888 incident of our
history are fully understood by the responsible leadership of the
church today and the tragic mistake in our own history is rectified
by this generation.
They pointed out that although Destiny more than forty times
asserts that there was “no rejection,” not one vital Ellen White
documentation is given in support of this claim, whereas scores of
her plainest statements contradict it. When in sacred history had
the leadership of God’s people so contradicted the testimony of an
inspired prophet as in this book with its “unprecedented” leadership
support?
Destiny claimed to have “affidavits” from “twenty-six living
participants at the 1888 Minneapolis Conference,” all of which affirm:
“There was no denomination-wide, or leadership-wide rejection,
these witnesses insisted.” However, not one of these “affidavits” is
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quoted in support of this assertion; further, not one human being
has seen them, because not one has ever surfaced to be seen. But
how could even a thousand “affidavits” from uninspired “witnesses”
affirming “acceptance” refute the inspired witness of a true prophet
affirming “rejection”? Is Laodicea the “true witness,” or is it Christ
Himself?
In direct response to the demand of Destiny, the authors of
“1888 Re-examined” made their “specific confession”:
November 1972:
1. We confess the truth of our Lord’s words: “Because thou
sayest, I am rich, and increased with goods, and have need of noth
ing [the authors acknowledge that this appeal is specifically directed
to the ministry and the leadership of the Laodicean church]; and
knowest not that thou art wretched, and miserable, and poor, and
blind, and naked.”
2. We confess and believe that the full truth of and the
understanding of the tragic failures of our past denominational
history give the brightest hope for a speedy finishing of the work in
glorious victory in our generation.
3. We confess that we understand our Lord’s words in
Revelation 3:19 to be a clear call to denominational repentance: “Be
zealous therefore, and repent,” the “angel” representing the leadership
and the ministry of His people.
4. We confess that a repentance on the part of this generation
for the failures of a past generation is highly in order because (a) it is
biblical; (b) Christ appealed to the Jewish nation for denominational
repentance; (c) He appealed to the repentance of Nineveh as a model
for Jewish leaders to follow in denominational repentance; (d) He
taught the principle of solidarity of His Jewish generation with their
ancestors in their guilt; (e) the writings of Ellen White recognize
the biblical principle of corporate and denominational guilt, and the
need for corporate and denominational repentance; (f ) for example,
the sin of Calvary is a sin for which we are all alike guilty.
5. We confess our complete confidence in the eventual
denominational repentance for which we plead, and the triumph of
the Seventh-day Adventist Church in the final crisis.
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6. We confess our hearty appreciation of the glorious truths
of the 1888 message itself as found in the original out-of-print
sources.
7. We confess ourselves to be the least and most unworthy of
all the Lord’s servants. “All this we confess!”
Five hundred copies of Confession were printed by a generous
concerned layman who had himself extensively corresponded with
the General Conference, A. L. Hudson. The plan was to send a copy
to every administrator and leader in North America. But when the
booklet was shown to the General Conference president, he urged that
we not release it out of respect for the author of Movement of Destiny
who was then mortally ill. The publication of its documentation
would only hasten his death. The president proposed a special ad
hoc committee to consider the issues raised. The authors decided
they could not reject an appeal and plea by the highest officer of
the church, especially an appeal for compassion for Elder Froom, to
preserve his life.
July 12, 1973. A committee was to be called for discussion with
both Wieland and Short (Exhibit 58). Wieland had since returned
from Africa to the United States because of family considerations.
The author of Destiny had assured him that he should be put out of
the ministry, but by General Conference kindness he was allowed to
serve on probation as pastor of a tiny isolated church in the desert.
Short happened to be on furlough. The General Conference called
the meeting for September 5-9, 1973, in the White Estate office.
The notice invited the manuscript authors “to read carefully all the
sources which our researchers have found to be relevant and have
pursued.” They did so, but saw nothing that was not already known.
The meeting was to be a “Study Committee,” with certain
committee members having been assigned to do research and present
reports. It is a disheartening experience after twenty years to re-read
those reports. They were contained in a “black book” distributed
in advance to General Conference committee members, a three
ring binder of over 300 pages gathered from many sources. They
included: unpublished Ellen White statements; pages from General
Conference Bulletin, 1893; Review and Herald; Signs of the Times,
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G. I. Butler’s, The Law in the Book of Galatians; the Bible texts which
Jones and Waggoner read at the session in answer to J. H. Morrison’s
concern that righteousness by faith would overshadow the law; 18
pages from Movement of Destiny; plus quotations from standard
books; and comments from some workers of the era.
This main report contains 72 pages of comments in a scholastic
format as shown in Exhibit 59. A wealth of extraneous material
sidesteps the thesis of the original manuscript. The conclusion of
this overview of the manuscript merely reiterates all the previous
reports, thus: ‘To acknowledge our failure in 1888 is therefore quite
unnecessary” (p. 52).
The author gives evidence that he fails to comprehend the
content of the manuscript, even to have read it accurately. This is
shown by his frequent use of the term “corporate confession,”
whereas the manuscript never uses that term. It speaks of “corporate
repentance.” This confusion leads to erroneous postulations such as:
“How many of the present day leaders should be involved in this
corporate confession? All? But since it is possible for just a ‘few’
to impede the outpouring of the Holy Spirit, would it be possible
that another [A. R.] Henry and [Harmon] Lindsay could cause
the corporate confession to malfunction? If so, who would decide
who these Spirit-less men were?” (p. 53). “Likewise, if corporate
confessions are essential, how many should there be? At what points
in the Christian dispensation should they occur? Is 1888 the only
time since Christ that this corporate confession is needed?” (p. 56).
These awkward misunderstandings lead to false conclusions and
create tragic theological distortions. The issue of corporate and
denominational repentance was not addressed.
Sadly, the authors were forced to conclude that the past twenty
years of on-going discussions had only deepened the confusion and
prejudice. The official historians, Spalding, Christian, Pease, Olson,
and Froom, had not settled the matter, nor had the author of the “black
book.” The ad hoc committee by and large gave evidence of a growing
impatient attitude toward the authors of “1888 Re-examined,” and
at the same time revealed unaltered support for Movement of Destiny.
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Two members of the committee however, Mervyn Maxwell and
Herbert Douglass, firmly supported these two authors.
Nevertheless, the committee met through the week, and even
into the Sabbath hours. There were sober discussions. At this and
subsequent meetings of these various committees one conclusion
always emerged: the authors of An Explicit Confession … Due the
Church were advised and counseled not to release it. Movement of
Destiny was to remain the officially endorsed version of our 1888
denominational history, and the authors must not make a public
response to it, even though the officers had endorsed its demand
that they do so.
In due time the General Conference republished Movement
of Destiny with the demand for “an explicit confession” deleted, but
with no change in its thesis. The committees that met over a period
of years had accomplished nothing except to silence the authors.
However, the General Conference president during this
time was keenly interested in spiritual revival and reformation. This
accounts for the very serious calls to the world church which came
out of the Annual Councils of 1973 and 1974. Those appeals were
unprecedented in their earnestness.
The chairman of the ad hoc committee assigned papers to be
prepared for further committee study.
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The “Introduction” sets out its purpose:
“The focal point of the entire study is the Minneapolis
Conference of 1888. This event in ‘our’ church history demands a
correct understanding. For too long there has been uncertainty and
lack of unity. The great importance of this session is not based on the
acceptance or rejection of a ‘doctrine’ by few, some, or many, but on
the question whether the Latter Rain and Loud Cry was recognized
and received or spurned and rejected. … Really what did ‘we see’ in
1888 and what do ‘we see’ now? There are two diametrically opposed
views. Either it was ‘a glorious victory and the beginning of larger
and better things for the advent church’ or it was [as Ellen White
says] ‘one of the saddest chapters in the history of the believers in
present truth’?” (Christian, The Fruitage of Spiritual Gifts, p. 219;
E.G.W. letter 179, 1902.)
The nine chapters and three appendices in this compilation
present an alarming documented account of how we have attempted
to re-write and distort our denominational history (Exhibit 61).
The extent of this endeavor is manifested repeatedly in well-known
denominational publications. In this study of the seven books
published up to that time, Movement of Destiny receives the closest
scrutiny, for it is this book that makes the greatest claims to “exalt
truth.”
Example: of the claimed 26 “eyewitnesses” only 13 were in
attendance at Minneapolis in 1888; the “affidavits” of these so-called
“eyewitnesses” were made 42 years after the session but not a single
complete sentence is quoted from these “affidavits” in support of the
claim that “there was no rejection.” This kind of pseudo evidence
would not stand in any law court. (Two authentic “eyewitness” reports
by R. T. Nash and C. C. McReynolds have been in general circulation
for decades; both clearly affirm leadership rejection).
January 9, 19, 28, 1976. “The Mystery of 1888” was soon
known in the field. Individuals quoted it and in due course some
wanted to publish it (Exhibits 62, 63, 64). The General Conference
did not want it to be published. The author wished to cooperate with
them, and so did not grant permission.
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At the urging of an interested reader, in April 1984, ten years
after it was compiled, it was printed by the author and a few thousand
copies went into the field. It is now out of print.
Wieland was appointed a member of one of the other ad hoc
sub-committees. He wrote a paper for the committee setting forth his
convictions entitled “The Knocking at the Door.” When the General
Conference called him in 1979 to return to Africa for further mission
service, interested friends and lay members in America published it
in book form.
Growing out of these special committees came a heightened
General Conference interest in righteousness by faith. The Annual
Council Appeals of 1973 and 1974 gave eloquent voice to it. In 1975
the president expressed to the authors serious interest in making
the actual 1888 message available to the world church. At last the
church would be permitted to know what was that “most precious
message” that Ellen White said was the “beginning” of the loud cry
of Revelation 18.
The authors of “1888 Re-examined” had believed for decades
they were not “harping”on a personal agenda nor “riding a hobby horse”
in their appeals to leadership. It was the True Witness of Revelation
3:14-21, not they, who declared that we need help in understanding
and believing the true message of Christ’s righteousness. In that
respect we were “wretched, miserable, poor, blind, and naked.” The
General Conference position had been the opposite: in that respect
we are “rich and increased with goods, in need of nothing.” But now
at last the president himself expressed a need for the world church
to hear the message. All that the authors had ever requested was that
the actual 1888-96 message be published as an anthology. We were
nobody; we could drop out of sight. Now there was a bright hope
that the authentic “most precious message” itself could be set free
from its prison in the archives.
Then came the Palmdale Conference of 1976 where Dr.
Desmond Ford presented convincing arguments to overthrow every
unique 1888 concept.
The president thereupon reversed his former decision to
promulgate the 1888 concepts. Dr. Ford was invited to America
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where he was given a tall pulpit for the widespread promotion of
his views in our denominational periodicals, workers’ gatherings, and
camp meetings.
Keen interest and enthusiasm for righteousness by faith
had been aroused by the official 1888 study committees by the
“Explicit Confession” episode. All that spiritual energy was now to
be re-channeled and diverted into promotion of “Reformationist,”
Evangelical, Calvinist theology. The popular theology which the
1888 message had opposed a century ago was now to be set forth
before the church as its true essence.
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Chapter Five
The 1988 Centennial
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was pending. The plan to hold a 1988 Centennial, voted by the
Annual Council held in Rio de Janeiro, was reported in the Review,
October 30, 1986. This “celebration” of the Minneapolis event was to
take place in the same city, even from the same pulpit that had been
used 100 years before. Church publications throughout the year were
programmed to make reference repeatedly to this historic conference.
Yet the message itself was destined once more to be suppressed and
kept from the people.
Nevertheless, in the providence of the Lord, the denomination
was at last to get a chance to know the full truth about the 1888
history. The Ellen G. White Estate chose to release and publish
the four volume set, The Ellen G. White 1888 Materials. These four
volumes with 1,821 pages settled forever what is “the testimony of
Jesus” regarding this episode in Seventh-day Adventist history. It was
not a great “victory,” as From Crisis to Victory 1888-1901 had said,
neither was there acceptance of the message as Movement of Destiny
had asserted. From now until the second advent these four Spirit of
Prophecy volumes will speak clearly to the church, confirming that
we have in our history an unbelief comparable to the Jews’ history of
Calvary.
Yet another happening in 1987 culminated nearly forty years
of dialogue. With the pending centennial, the authors of the original
1950 manuscript, in response to urgent appeals from some pastors
and laymembers, decided to make it available to anyone who wanted
a copy. Could they be faithful “under God” to the cause of truth and
not do so? 1888 Re-examined was published as a revised and updated
version with added appendices, and 9000 copies were printed. It was
not long before there was need for another 5000. The sub-title of
the book stated frankly:—”1888-1988—The story of a century of
confrontation between God and His people.”
The February 1988 issue of Ministry magazine carried a book
review by C. Mervyn Maxwell that was twenty-three column inches
long. But this was only a portion of the original draft—which the
editors deemed too favorable and therefore cut. But even so the
review was very generous and insightful beyond anything officially
published during the past forty years. It closed with history and
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prophecy combined: “At the 1893 General Conference session an
Ellen White statement promised that the 1888 experience will
‘sometime’ ‘be seen in its true bearing with all the burden of woe that
has resulted from it.’ Wieland and Short hope that that ‘sometime’
is near at hand. They hope that the revised 1888 Re-examined will
prove to be a contribution in due season.”
That indeed expressed their hope, combined with the conviction
that when God’s people will come to sense the truth of their history,
they will respond to the convictions of the Holy Spirit, Laodicea is
honest in heart, and will therefore overcome.
1987, Continued. With the centennial but a few months away,
the Review and Herald published a 288-page book with a thesis
obviously in sharp contradiction to the White Estate’s four-volume
publication, The Ellen G. White 1888 Materials. The title of this new
book was geared to condition the reader to believe there was apos
tasy inherent in the message and messengers the Lord sent to His
people. The cover jacket title proclaimed: From 1888 to Apostasy, The
Case of A. T. Jones. Added to this was a blurb: “A fatal flaw in his
character turned him against the church.”
This biography is strangely biased toward painting Jones in
as poor a light as possible. Like a blast of Arctic tempest, chilling
derogatory comments abound: he was “egotistic,” “self-confident,”
“abrasive,” “harsh,” “cocksure,” “sensational,” “extreme.” Subsequently
the author stated clearly in another periodical his avowed purpose
of destroying Jones’ credibility: “I was doing my best to demonstrate
that Jones was aberrant from beginning to end” (Adventist Currents,
April 1988, p. 43).
Such a cherished goal is unique for a biographer, doubly so
in a centennial year appointed to honor his memory. Ellen White’s
appraisal of Jones was decidedly different. The Adventist conscience
cannot disregard it (Exhibit 65). Vigorously advertised and endorsed
by the General Conference, the Adventist Review, and Ministry
Magazine, this book set the tone for the centennial year and became
the modern successor to Movement of Destiny.
The 1988 Centennial. The year was launched with a special
edition of the Review which contained seven articles by contemporary
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authors and one by Ellen White. But not a word was printed from
the “messengers” which “the Lord in His great mercy sent” to this
people in 1888.
The February Ministry centennial issue with 64 pages was
double the normal size, containing thirteen scholarly articles with
scores of citations. But again neither Jones nor Waggoner was
allowed to contribute an article.
An official editorial policy seemed firmly set to destroy the
credibility of the 1888 message and messengers. Readers of the
Review were warned to beware of Jones and Waggoner as “fires of
fanaticism and extremism … have flourished” with their roots in
the 1888 message which they brought to this church (September 8,
1988, p. 8). Almost beyond belief, the church was called to celebrate
a centennial by denigrating the principals and their message that
gave cause for a centennial! As church membership noticed this and
wrote to the Review “Letters” column, there came a slight respite.
Finally in the last hours of the centennial year the editors relented
in their policy enough to permit one brief page each from the 1888
messengers. Incredibly, in the year set aside for “commemoration” of
the 1888 message, only two pages of the actual message were allowed
to get into print out of 1,400 pages published during the year.
November 2-5, 1988, the Celebration. After two years of
planning, the celebration of the 100 year old 1888 General Conference
took place in Minneapolis itself. Those who came in order to learn of
Adventist history and the “most precious message” the Lord sent to
His people were keenly disappointed. Out of fourteen sessions listed
in the program two were cancelled, four for the general public in
the evening had no connection with Adventist history or the actual
message; three were panel discussions; two were morning devotionals;
leaving three study hours for the 1888 message. But again, the 1888
messengers themselves were silenced. A first-ever in world history
had occurred: never before had a nation or a denomination professed
to celebrate positively a “centennial,” yet silence and derogate the
principals they ostensibly celebrated. (However, their photographs
were displayed).
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As the audio tapes of the meetings are reviewed, confusion
and contradiction become evident. One speaker, had he known the
message of 1888, could never have inferred that the “most precious
message” of 1888 was a laughing-stock-theology in relation to the
nature of Christ.
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been told for decades, and largely supported these authors’ positions.
Written by a former member of the authoritative Biblical Research
Institute of the General Conference, this book denied that 1888 was
a “victory.” It courageously presented an understanding of Adventist
history parallel to the thesis of the manuscript. It clearly conforms
to The Ellen G. White 1888 Materials and sets before the church a
dramatic turn-around that verifies the truth of the 1888 history. This
was the contribution of the Review and Herald to the centennial.
Meanwhile, the Pacific Press tried to publish a book for the
centennial year setting forth the actual content of the 1888 message
itself, Grace on Trial. Commissioned by the editors, this book (title
chosen by the press editors) highlighted the reality that even though
a message of much more abounding grace had been held on trial
by church leadership for a century, it was in fact the heart-warming
truth of the biblical gospel itself. Under pressure from the Union
presidents of the North American Division, the General Confer
ence officers forced the Pacific Press to abandon its publication. The
General Conference told the book editor to inform the author that
the real reason why they killed the book was that it would not sell.
Urged to do so by the principal Pacific Press book editor, the author
decided to publish it privately.9
Lip service to overwhelming historical evidence shows
prudence, but it does not confirm acceptance. The church is now
being told we don’t need the 1888 message because our modern
theologians can do better. ‘Jones and Waggoner posed a formidable
threat to Adventist doctrine and leadership,” so that their message
must again be rejected (Adventist Review, September 8, 1988). The
church’s highest priority is strangely declared to be a negative one—
that of being ignorant of their “most precious message” which the
Lord sent us, while somehow we must know Him: “Our greatest
9
Some 100,000 copies have thus far (1993) been printed in several
editions in English, French, and Russian, including a version re-
worded for non-Adventist readers entitled Powerful Good News. The
book is also available on cassette tapes.
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need today is not to know exactly what Jones and Waggoner said
at the 1888 Minneapolis session” (ibid., January 18, 1990). There
remains in many places an embargo on the message, and workers
who promote it are frowned upon and even threatened. It is this
anti-1888-message syndrome which has prepared the way for our
present state of pluralism, schism, and loss of confidence.
But the concern of loyal church members is slowly on the rise,
as expressed in occasional letters that get into the church press.
1989, History Magnified. Following the centennial these
authors prepared a 63-page companion booklet to 1888 Re-examined,
entitled 1988 Re-examined, which reviews our current history 100
years after Minneapolis I. This detailed the circumstances leading
up to the plans for the 1988 Centennial; the publicity given to the
celebration; the denial in the church press of the need to know the
1888 message, and the impact of the Minneapolis II centennial.
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of faith and true love, will stand at His side without concern for
receiving reward.
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by Christ in the flesh. It does not recognize how the High
Priest’s ministry must enter a new phase on the antitypical Day
of Atonement. He cannot forever minister His blood to cover the
perpetual sinning of His people. He must accomplish something on
the Day of Atonement that has never been accomplished previously.
He must have a people who through His faith overcome “even as”
He overcame. “Evangelical Christianity” has no use for these basics
of Seventh-day Adventist justification by faith.
Furthermore, “evangelical Christianity” generally views the
human nature of Christ in opposition to the “post-Adamic human
nature” as Jones and Waggoner understood and proclaimed it. Angry
Saints suggests (p. 129), that because the historical record of the
1888 session does not include a sermon on Christ’s human nature,
therefore the subject was not a part of the actual 1888 message and
is thus irrelevant. Such a stance ignores the fact that this subject was
a vital part of their published message in this era. The increasing
controversy over this gospel hallmark grows to a large degree out of
the continuing resistance, conscious or unconscious, of the message
and the messengers of 1888.
Angry Saints is unique in its purpose to contradict the
documented history in 1888 Re-examined. Over 20 times the authors
are referred to by name or in footnotes, plus inferences which cannot
be mistaken. This published opposition may be good if it stimulates
church members to study out the facts. One thing is certain, truth
will eventually prevail.
The centennial is now past and Angry Saints is glad that it
is gone and hopes that 1888 can be laid aside. But the truth of our
history will not go away. It must be faced for what it is—a confron
tation with Christ that cannot forever be evaded.
1989, Vortex Developing. Angry Saints is but one wayside
marker along a road the church has traveled to reach its present state
of disunity, but it helps to explain “how we got where we are.” More
recently articles in denominational journals have promoted the pre-
fall nature of Christ as now the accepted theology of the church.
In the same year that Angry Saints was published (1989),
there was issued in the month of August an authoritative document
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from the General Conference Biblical Research Institute, entitled:
“An Appeal for Church Unity.” This 10-page proposal offers solid
guidance for the church. It also draws a sharp line between those who
hold certain doctrinal positions in contrast to others with differing
views. It affirms that church members who “hold certain positions
on the human nature of Christ, the nature of sin, and the doctrine of
righteousness by faith in an end-time setting” are divisive, dangerous,
and thereby approaching apostasy.
“Appeal” makes this charge because: “Adventist people as a
whole do not share these views. … The world church of Seventh-day
Adventists has agreed on 27 fundamental beliefs, summarization of
basic biblical teachings, and seeks to rally the church membership
to the Saviour and this core of Bible truths. The specific topics
alluded to above are not a part of these summarizations. The world
church has never viewed these subjects as essential to salvation nor
to the mission of the remnant church. The Scriptures do not make
these subjects central; the data is sparse. … There can be no strong
unity within the world church of God’s remnant people so long as
segments who hold these views vocalize and agitate them both in
North America and in overseas divisions. These topics need to be
laid aside and not urged upon our people as necessary issues. We
should not let Satan take advantage of God’s people at this point and
allow such matters to divide us.”
This very serious official document clearly states its intent
by repeating the same points in a later paragraph: “[T]he world
church of the remnant people have selected and summarized ‘the
great truths of the word of God’ in the 27 Fundamental Beliefs. But
although thousands of hours have been spent by our people on the
subjects of the human nature of Christ, the nature of sin, certain
aspects of character development in the end-time situation, … there
is no general agreement.”
This Appeal portends a sinister end to the saga of the 1888
message, going far beyond the opposition of Smith and Butler of
a century ago. It draws the comparison between the early church
and their problems with persons causing “divisions and confusion”
today, in that in past ages “the leadership was forced to separate them
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from the body.” Likewise today: “In a true communion of the church,
motivated by love, such action would be taken reluctantly, and only
as a last resort—for the sake of the unity and success of the mission
of the church.”
Thus the opposition to the 1888 message now takes a turn
unknown a century ago. Any situation that calls for disfellowshipping
Seventh-day Adventists from the church must be considered serious
in the extreme. As this proclamation is studied carefully, what does
it say?
This “Appeal for Church Unity” tells the world church:
1. “The doctrine of righteousness by faith in an end-time
setting” is not part of the Adventist “27 fundamental beliefs,” and
suggests even that its proclamation is satanic. Not only would this
horrify Ellen White and our brethren of a century ago; this would
astonish the General Conference leadership of 1950.
2. The “nature of sin” is not a part of our fundamental beliefs.
3. Nor is the incarnation, “the human nature of Christ,” a part
of the 27 fundamental beliefs which make this people distinct in
sacred history, unique in all Christianity.
4. God’s people should lay aside these topics which will invite
Satan to take advantage. Furthermore, such beliefs “the world church
does not recognize as essential to salvation.”
These proclamations raise questions when compared with
the 1988 publication of Seventh-day Adventists Believe … A Bibical
Exposition of 27 Fundamental Doctrines, a book that explains our
beliefs, a comprehensive, expanded and readable form of the doctrinal
convictions as stated in the 27 Fundamental Beliefs of Seventh-day
Adventists published in the Church Manual.
The “Appeal for Unity” is perplexing. To suggest that the church
should “lay aside” the topics of “righteousness by faith in an end-time
setting,” and the incarnation of Christ, is to cancel the agenda of
the great controversy. Unless God’s people understand the “present
truth” of “righteousness by faith” without compromise, what hope is
there for the church to deal with the “nature of sin,” which is the very
essence of the battle waged by God’s enemy who is dedicated to war
against righteousness? And how can there be victory in this end-
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time battle unless sinners know how close Christ has come to us? He
“was made a little lower than the angels for the suffering of death”
that He “should taste death for every man.” And “as the children are
partakers of flesh and blood, he also himself likewise took part of the
same” because “he took not on him the nature of angels; but he took
on him the seed [spermatos] of Abraham. Wherefore in all things it
behoved him to be made like unto his brethren” (Hebrews 2:9-18).
But more than this—God’s regard for His people has caused
Him to send specific counsel on this very point. It is instruction that
cannot be misunderstood:
“The humanity of the Son of God is everything to us. It is the
golden linked chain which binds our souls to Christ and through
Christ to God. This is to be our study. Christ was a real man, and
He gave proof of His humility in becoming a man. And He was
God in the flesh. … We must come to the study of this subject with
the humility of a learner, with a contrite heart. And the study of the
incarnation of Christ is a fruitful field, and will repay the searcher
who digs deep for hidden truth” (MS 67, 1898 [7BC 904, 905]).
His humanity “is everything to us … This is to be our study …
This study will repay the searcher”—and yet we are told to lay aside
this topic as it is not “essential” for our people.
How did we get ourselves into such confusion? Does this
grow out of our frantic attempt to support Questions on Doctrine and
Movement of Destiny as these books tried to bring us into the fold of
the evangelical world?
The Evangelicals know that we are confused and have told
the world so in their publications (see Christian Research Journal,
summer 1988; Christianity Today, Feb. 5, 1990). They know and
they state plainly that it was Questions on Doctrine that “repudiated”
the “traditional Adventist doctrines … that Christ had inherited a
human nature affected by the Fall, and that the last-day believers
would achieve sinless perfection.”
How can they see what we can’t see?
Winter 1990, “Model or Substitute? Does It Matter How
We See Jesus?” The “Appeal” from the Biblical Research Institute
has either been misunderstood or ignored, judging from articles in
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our denominational press. The “topics” expressly forbidden as “not
essential” for our people have nevertheless been emphasized there.
These articles support Questions on Doctrine which has created
confusion in our ranks from the day it came off the press. Is this the
road to “unity”?
Beginning in January 1990, the Review ran a six-part series on
the nature of Christ—over 15 pages, in direct violation of the “Appeal
for Unity.” The thrust of the articles was discerned by some church
members as they wrote to the editor. The “Letters” column expressed
great concern At least some of our members sense a constraint to
speak about these topics. The letters indicate that the six-part series
was “confusion.” Some comments: “Shades of the new theology! If
Jesus’ ‘nature was unlike ours,’ may heaven have mercy on us, for we
are all lost.” The author “made an excellent attempt to harmonize
the errors of Roman Catholicism and Calvinism with Bibical truth,
but it was just not good enough. … The ‘original sin’ dogma and the
denial of the real humanity of Christ paraded as the gospel.”
“I breathe a sigh of relief that the juries of the land do not
share [the author’s] theory of inherited guilt!” “No one would use this
text [Philippians 2:7] to prove that Christ was unlike men, yet such
poor logic has been applied in these articles. … The author creates
confusion.” The author “paints a totally unscriptural picture of the
nature of man that, in turn, forces him to come up with a Jesus who
was not truly human, one who did not truly ‘come in the flesh’ as the
Bible so clearly teaches. According to 1 John 4:1-3, this is a serious
matter indeed.” ‘Try as he might do otherwise, [the author] painted
himself into the same corner as Saint Augustine. … [This] position
does violence to Scripture and, more important, to the character of
God. … Away with the error of Calvinism, Arminianism, as well as
universalism.”
But the Review must still promote this non-Adventist view.
Because of the strong opposition to the series, the author was given
a full column of rebuttal in the April 26 issue. The roots of his ideas
go back nearly seven years when the same author had a four-page
presentation in the Review of June 30, 1983, “Behold the Man.”
The reaction from our church members then as expressed in their
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letters to the editor indicate that many rejected the theology of this
article by a ratio of four to one. Yet the Review editors evidence a
determination to steam-roll the new theology on its way. Who can
measure the confusion that Questions on Doctrine has sown in the
remnant church?
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Chapter Six
The Issue of Issues
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For some reason the Evangelical view of the nature of Christ
continually gets “spelled our in print, while the “most precious” view
that “the Lord in His great mercy sent” to us in 1888 is labeled as an
offending doctrine which inhibits unity, is not “essential,” and even
attracts the adjective “satanic.”
Fall 1991, “Tithe” and the Nature of Christ. The November 7
issue of the Review included an unusual supplement as a tract in the
center spread. This 16 page document is perhaps unique in Adventist
history; it brings into focus a growing problem in the church. Only
about fifty percent of the church membership return to the Lord
that which is called tithe, but in many cases is not a faithful tenth.
Therefore this is a subject of great importance. It is the sacred duty of
every Christian to return the tithes and offerings to the Lord.
But this tract on tithe becomes a promotion piece on the
subject which the “Appeal for Unity” has urged us to lay aside—the
human nature of Christ. How could this be?
The question arises as to whether a church member should
return tithe to the church if such a one believes the church “is in
apostasy.” This leads to the question, “What is apostasy?”
The dictionary defines apostasy as the “renunciation of
a religious faith,” or the “abandonment of a previous loyalty.” No
Seventh-day Adventist can renounce and forsake the teachings of
this church and remain a member in good standing. It would seem
the question is wrong.
The question should be, “What is heresy?” The dictionary
defines heresy as “an opinion, doctrine, or practice contrary to truth
or to generally accepted beliefs and standards.”
By this definition we have “heresy” in our ranks, for we are
not willing to acknowledge the “generally accepted beliefs” regarding
righteousness by faith as the Lord “sent” them to us. Increasingly the
message is under dispute and rejected. Why? Because, it is said, the
1980 set of 27 beliefs did not articulate this in a clear statement.
The tithe tract diverges from its announced topic to strike a
blow in this forbidden area of the nature of Christ. It tells the world
church that we have three views: (1) “at the incarnation Christ took
the nature of Adam before Adam’s fall”; (2) “He took the nature of
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Adam after the fall”; (3) He took a nature that was a combination
of these two understandings. The tract states that “a large number of
Adventist ministers, Bible teachers and church members, of equal
learning and commitment, today take the third rather than the
second of these positions. Why? Because of (1) certain acknowledged
ambiguities in both Scripture and Mrs. White’s writings on the
human nature of Jesus, and (2) some very clear warnings in the Spirit
of Prophecy against any attempt at totally humanizing Christ.”11
Never before has the denominational press stated that we
Adventists have “three views of the nature of Christ.” Truth demands
that the alleged “ambiguities” in Ellen White’s writings be recognized
if they are there. This involves not charges of “apostasy” or “heresy” but
knowing the Son of God who became the Son of man to accomplish
the plan of salvation. There is no “eternal life” nor is there a second
advent until a people “know” Jesus Christ. Confusion about Christ
Himself prepares us to receive a false christ, Baal—to be deceived by
Satan himself who appears as an angel of light.
1992 and Onward. The theological issues facing the church
will not go away. Meanwhile, the latter rain blessing is a vain hope
until there is a true heart unity. Error is never harmless. It never
sanctifies but always brings confusion and dissension. This peril is
vividly portrayed in a Review article of January 7, 1993.
It is observed that “history has shown that the church’s
fragmentation has always resulted from some important or
exaggerated theological dispute. The question for us now, therefore,
is whether there exists among us any theological controversy of
sufficient magnitude to generate a schism in the church.”
That the remnant church in the end-time should face such
a quandary is foreign to its mandate. However, the Review article,
11
The warning alluded to here is against “making Christ altogether
human, such an one as ourselves” (5BC 1129, emphasis supplied).
Ellen White did not deny that Christ became truly human while
retaining in totality His divinity, though laying aside its prerogatives.
We “ourselves” are sinners and will never be divine.
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page 21, senses there is grave danger. Again this serves as a pretext to
agitate the forbidden topic: “One theological issue, however, has that
potential. It centers on the nature of Christ, righteousness, and the
absolute sinless perfection of the final remnant.” The author goes on
to say, “I seriously doubt the likelihood of an outright schism in the
church on their account.” May the powers of heaven prove him right
that no schism engulf this church. But the potential remains.
ISSUES:
The Seventh-day Adventist Church
and Private Ministries
Fall 1992. This book of 467 pages is the first of its kind in
Seventh-day Adventist history. Not many will read the entire book
for its thesis is contained in the first 84 pages of text. The balance of
383 pages is made up of an array of letters, legal briefs, committee
actions, board minutes, article reprints, all contained in 46 appendices.
A companion tract of 16 pages with almost the same title, a summary
of the book, went to the world church as an insert in the Adventist
Review of November 7, 1992.
Copyrighted with no date listed, Issues is produced by the
North American Division Officers and Union Presidents. This is one
Division of the world field; it is not the General Conference in world
business session. Issues therefore cannot be accepted as authorized by
the world church, even though it is certain to create repercussions
throughout the denomination as it implies the full approval of the
General Conference.
But why such a book? Will it bring unity to the church? Will
it help prepare a people for the final issues and the coming of the
Lord? Its promoters hope so.
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differences are grounded in theology.”
This is the crucial issue. Theology is “the study of religious
faith, practice, and experience; the study of God and his relation
to the world.” That a problem of this nature and magnitude should
engulf the remnant church portends beyond question that we have
already entered into the “shaking.”
Issues says it does not propose “to provide a theological rebuttal
to the views held by members” of these certain “dissident” groups. It
claims that the “issues of the conflict over the nature of Christ and
righteousness by faith are not nearly as straightforward as [some]
would have them appear.” It goes on to say: “Both Scripture and Ellen
White contain statements that seem to support varying viewpoints,
and these must be held in tension with each other.” This repeats
what the “Tithe” tract of November 7, 1991, described as “certain
acknowledged ambiguities.” If these “tensions” and “acknowledged
ambiguities” do exist, it should be a simple matter to list even a few of
them. This would enable every conscientious Seventh-day Adventist
to compare and see wherein the Bible is not clear and wherein Ellen
White speaks in uncertain terms.
Instead, Issues tells the church to study the series of six articles
that ran in the Review, January and February 1990. This is the series
entitled, “Model or Substitute? Does It Matter How We See Jesus?”
which is based on the theology of Questions on Doctrine, the root of our
present confusion. This is the series that caused consternation in the
hearts of many Adventists at the time it was published. Yet now it is
set forth as the touchstone of orthodoxy.
If as Issues claims, there is no official church action regarding
the nature of Christ, it is equally true there is no church action to
alter one word of the truth we have held from our beginnings.
The integrity of the church cannot be established nor
maintained by force of hierarchical authority contrary to the faith
of the world church. Confidence in the ministry and leadership of
the church can and will be sustained by strict adherence to truth.
In this environment only flawless theology will stand. Unity at the
cost of compromise sustained by false theology is delusive. The peril
surrounding the church now in this final hour is that the mystery of
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godliness and the mystery of iniquity mature simultaneously.
The process is hastening on apace.
In the decades since 1950 the church has drifted deeper into
Baal worship. We have required about the same time that ancient
Israel needed to reach their depths in the days of Elijah, yet they
did not know their true condition. The seventh church is now in the
same situation.
Each refusal to repent has only deepened our guilt and prevented
the Holy Spirit from working. No perversion of the gospel could be
more perilous than the false elation of supposed progress while we
actually know not the Word that “became flesh and dwelt among us.”
The explosion of baptisms in Russia and the ever increasing numbers
in the Third World constitute a membership that must soon wrestle
with the same theological issues now fracturing the leadership
church in the home base. Truth must be settled in the home base
before schism affects the world church.
Statistics will do nothing to bring the latter rain and loud cry
to the corporate body of the church. Glowing reports may feed our
ego, but such will never prepare a people for the final crisis. What the
Lord wanted to do for His people 100 years ago, He still wants to
do, but even omnipotence cannot prevail over individual or corporate
rejection of the “gold,” the “white raiment,” and the “eyesalve” which
the True Witness has waited to give us.
For years we have talked much about the latter rain but we
have failed to understand that the Lord sent it 100 years ago when
we “insulted” the Holy Spirit. Our Lord has feelings too, like the
children He created, and He is waiting for us to see and know what
we did to Him and how our opposition allowed Satan to succeed
in shutting away from us the “special power of the Holy Spirit.”
Notwithstanding the millions we may spend to fulfill our plans for
a global strategy, “the light that is to lighten the whole earth with its
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glory was resisted, and by the action of our own brethren has been in
a large degree kept away from the world.”
When did this happen? It happened when the Lord sent
to His people a “most precious message.” As we enter our second
century since heaven tried to finish the work, how much longer will
it take for us to “know” what needs to be known, and then repent?
After 6000 years of waiting, the Saviour makes His earnest plea to
the seventh church.
But we are not the first people to have misunderstood a
message that God sent. The ancient Jews brought grief to the
Messiah because they were certain they understood. The heartbreak
the Saviour suffered then cannot compare to the grief pressed upon
Him by the lukewarm, unknowing response He has received from
the last of the “seven churches.” The High Priest is waiting to rise up
and proclaim, “it is done.”
How much longer will He have to wait?
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else. We join Job on his dung-heap. Although we ask “Why?” yet still
we trust.
For the first time in Seventh-day Adventist history, in the 1888
episode almost the entire leadership of the church ranged themselves
solidly against the Holy Spirit. Ellen White has truthfully said that
since then the Lord has a controversy with His people. The terrible
fires that consumed our greatest institutions at the old Battle Creek
headquarters were the outcome of more than a decade of constant
resistance of the 1888 message. Mercifully, there was no loss of life.
The Lord’s servant has left on record an awesome warning for the
future:
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in the house of my friends,’ …And in that day it shall be that living
waters shall flow from Jerusalem.” (Zechariah 12:10, 11-13:1, 2; 14:8,
NKJV).
The authors of 1888 Re-examined believe that He did not
receive those “wounds” in His hands for naught. In due course His
“friends” will know what they have done to Him and how they
insulted His Holy Spirit; then they will indeed “grieve for Him” with
a repentance supreme in all history. His love will be seen and be
appreciated to accomplish what judgments by sword and fire have
not accomplished.
We do not need to wait for another generation to requite His
sacrificial love. We do not need new and strange reinterpreting of the
time prophecies of Daniel and Revelation to set dates for His return.
God’s people can in this generation, now, fulfill all that heaven is
waiting on—”Be zealous therefore and repent.” The grateful receipt
of that magnificent blessing will be the sign before the whole universe
that at last the “Bride” is willing to accept the hand of the Divine
Lover.
While the Bridegroom is forced to tarry there are signs that
His Bride-to-be is making herself ready. Stirrings in the church give
positive hope.
Three outstanding articles have appeared in recent issues of
Ministry magazine. There is a refreshing candor evident. In the April
1992 issue the editor stirred the Adventist conscience:
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One field president … talked to a local chief and
promised him seven bales of clothing if he could deliver 1,000
people for baptism. By the end of the year his tally of 953
people was close enough to get the clothing.
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a difference between individual recognition of this fact and
corporate recognition? Some have tried to educate us in this
area, but we have ignored their pleas. … We as church leaders
need to spend much more time studying and applying this
passage. …
Truly, to our shame, “we are still here.” And yes, this is “the
foremost proof that we have not repented as a church.” But the very
impotence and disunity of the church at this time are a great cause for
encouragement, for this situation is a fulfillment of God’s warning to
His people that means He is still leading!
Books of a new order have been published which sabotage the
faith we have been given and defy our history; intellectual philosophy
does attempt to usurp a “thus saith the Lord”; the Sabbath is lightly
regarded; virtue is considered better than vice while we are told
falsely that vice will prevail among the elect until the second advent;
nothing seems “to stand in the way of a new movement” But the
Lord’s word will not return unto Him void; the sanctuary “shall be
cleansed.” We are convinced that God believes that the basic heart
of the Seventh-day Adventist Church is honest. The Church simply
needs to know the full truth.
If God believes that His people will respond, shouldn’t
we believe it too? And if we do believe as He does, shouldn’t we
courageously tell the truth? That distilled pure message of truth which
was sent to us 100 years ago and verified by the Lord’s messenger
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will yet do its work The heart of Israel will be touched when the
truth of our history is appreciated. Our Heavenly Father has staked
the honor of His throne on the sure result of His people coming to
know and accept His “precious message.” These authors have staked
their all on the same conviction. The Lord’s truth contains a compelling
power to bring repentance.
While the Lord is waiting, He assures us: “’For a mere moment
I have forsaken you, but with great mercies I will gather you. With a
little wrath I hid My face from you for a moment; but with everlasting
kindness I will have mercy on you/ says the Lord, your Redeemer.”
“I will betroth you to Me forever; yes, I will betroth you to Me in
righteousness and justice, in lovingkindness and mercy. I will betroth
you to Me in faithfulness, and you shall know the Lord’” (Isaiah 54:7,
8; Hosea 2:19, 20, NKJV).
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Crest Hotel, San Francisco, Cal.
July 11, 1950
Dear Brethren:
On this day of fasting and prayer, we as a people are to seek
not to the god of Ekron, but to the God of truth, the Author and
Finisher of our faith, the God who has led the remnant church these
106 years, as He led Israel of old. The President’s stirring address
last night, calling upon us to guard the faith once delivered to the
saints, and to speak forthrightly in defence of it, presents a challenge.
With this in mind, it is imperative that we know exactly That it is
that should be guarded, for certainly there is great confusion in our
ranks to-day.
This confusion vas evident in the “Christ-centered preaching”
urged upon us repeatedly in the Ministerial Association meeting
of the past four days. These meetings were supposed to set the
stage for a mighty revival among God’s people at this General
Conference session. This “Christ-centered preaching” is expected by
its proponents, to bring in a great reformation among Seventh-day
Adventists workers the world around.
No one for a moment could disparage the preaching of the
true Christ as the center and substance of the three angels’ messages.
However, in the confusion, it has been discerned that much of
this so-called “Christ-centered preaching” is in reality merely anti-
Christ centered preaching. It vitally affects the outcome of this General
Conference session. To make such a statement to the General Con
ference Committee sounds fantastic. But startling things are not
unexpected by the church in the last days.
No Seventh-day Adventist can deny for a moment that Satan
will take the religious world captive, appearing as an angel of light, to
deceive if possible the very elect. Through a three-fold union of apostate
Protestantism, Romanism, and Spiritualism, he will present the most
bitter opposition to the three angels’ messages ever encountered. Men
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such as E. Stanley Jones, Leslie Weatherhead, Norman Vincent Peale,
and Billy Graham, are allying themselves with Spiritualistic forces,
robed in garments of light. They indeed preach a winsome, lovable,
always smiling “Christ”. But, with the aid of the Bible, this “Christ”
can be proven to be identifiable with the father of all lies, the author
of Spiritualism and Romanism. Need it be said that we have nothing
to do as Seventh-day Adventists with such a false Christ”? Ought
we not to realize that our cruel and bitter enemy knows by now far
too well the fallacy of trying to allure us with apparent evil, gross and
crude Spiritualism? In these last days, he will assume the form of
good, and seek to allure us and charm us with specious reasonings,
apparently holy, causing men, as we heard last night, “to give utterance
to opinions that will betray sacred, holy trusts.” It could be proven, as
simply and as clearly as that the Seventh-day Sabbath is the true one,
that the Christ” of these modern men is identifiable with the god of
modern Spiritualism!
In the sermons and exhortations of the past four days, no
clear distinction whatever has been made between the Christ of
Seventh-day Adventism, and this false Christ. While lip service has
been paid to the preaching of our distinctive doctrines, they have
been openly and repeatedly disparaged as secondary, this “Christ”
being considered primary. We are thus left with a vague mysticism
permeating Seventh-day Adventism. If followed to its logical ends,
it can only bring in a false, spurious type of “Christian” experience,
calculated instead to deceive the very elect, but which will not hasten
the finishing of the work committed to us. It is a modern counterpart
of an ancient call to Israel in the wilderness to return to Egypt. Should
not this matter, dear brethren and elders, be thoroughly investigated by
men capable of discerning between the wiles of the devil and the solemn
work of the true Holy Spirit?
Is it not true that our fasting,praying,and seeking for the outpouring
of the Spirit will be tragically hindered until this matter is clarified? The
most earnest intercessory, pleading prayers offered unwittingly to Baal
will not avail Israel one drop of heaven-sent rain, in this time of spiritual
drought. Is it not true that the “Christ” of these modern Spiritualistic
actors is in reality Israel’s ancient enemy, Baal, under a new and more
highly refined guise?
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The following facts are worthy of consideration:
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of this danger. The omega will be of a most startling nature.” Pp.
15, 16.
“The strange part of the matter is that these ideas have been
accepted by so many as beautiful truth.” P. 49.
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3. This deception of refined Spiritualism constitutes a species of
virtual Baal worship. The old enemy of ancient Israel has deceived many
in modern Israel.
b. Ancient Israel did not realize that they had apostatized into
Baal worship. It vas gradual, unconscious apostasy. This is evident
from statements in Prophets and Kings, and Jeremiah 2:23, 35; 16:10.
Modern Israel’s Baal worship has also been gradual and unconscious.
Men are sincerely deceived.
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ministerial ranks, and sadly familiar to us here and there, indicate
that the fruit of this apostasy is increasingly bitter.Faith in the true
Christ, dear brethren, bears not fruit such as we see today amongst
us.
5. It is certain that there are keen minds in the world who will
someday be able to prove conclusively from history and theology, that the
“Christ” of modern Babylon, of Billy Graham, E. Stanley Jones, etc., is the
ancient Adonis, or Tammuz, of old pagan religions, and the false Messiah of
Mithraism, and the anti-Christ of Romanism.
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c. It can be proven that this modern “Christ-centered preaching”
is a subtle reappearance of the “other gospel” which Paul so sharply
warned the Galatians against receiving. Gal. 1:8, 9. If we make any
mistakes in this field of Christian experience, it is damnable confusion.
You will recall that that “other gospel”“bewitched” the Galatians. (The
word “proven”, brethren, does not mean making of bald, unsupported
statements. There are authorities as J. Garnier, who wrote The True
Christ and the False Christ, London. 1900, a monumental work which
may be found in the R&H library, and authorities cited by Waigal in
The Paganism in Our Christianity, and Frazer’s Golden Bough.)
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Our dear people, could they voice their unconscious desires, would
thus appeal to this highest Committee of authority, gathered at this world
session in 1950, to clarify this highly important matter of the difference
between the true God and the false, the true Christ and the anti-Christ,
the true Holy Spirit and Spiritualism, and true Christian experience and
false supposition. No matter before this gathering can possibly be as
weighty with serious import as this.
Retyped verbatim March 1993, from the original indistinct carbon copy.
No effort has been made in this current edition to retain any of the original
layout, appearance, or pagination of the original.
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